Why Qantas wants you for its media team

Olivia Wirth at the BOSS Emerging Leaders program event on Thursday. “We have a group of people who love social media who we call the young Qantas Angels.”
Photo: Getty Images/James Alcock

by
Su-Lin Tan

News breaks fast on social media, so Qantas is looking to its customers to help it out.

Social media “angels" within the company and customers waiting in airport lounges could be the future of media for Qantas, said the airline’s high-profile brand, marketing and corporate affairs executive, Olivia Wirth.

She said the QF32 incident in 2010, when a Qantas jet narrowly avoided crashing after mechanical failures, changed the way the airline thinks about media.

“We first found out about the QF32 incident when our share price fell and news of the incident had gone nuts on Twitter," Ms Wirth told the BOSS Emerging Leaders program event in Sydney on Thursday night. “Not a good way to find out about a disaster."

News of the incident spread across social media before a press conference or media statement could be initiated

“Our initial approach is to try to manage and control 35,000 employees and we recognised we didn’t have enough the right processes," Ms Wirth said. “We walked away knowing what we did was wrong and decided to take a different approach."

Qantas chief executive
Alan Joyce
said the company had missed the “whole social media end of communication" during the QF32 incident.

The airline has since boosted its investment in social media engagement.

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‘70,000 sets of eyeballs’

Ms Wirth has a marketing team that is dedicated to managing social media content that engages in conversations with users on various platforms – and the broader Qantas workforce can also be involved.

“We have a group of people who love social media who we call the young Qantas Angels," Ms Wirth said.

“There are about 250 of them. They have gone through social media training. If there is a crisis and we need more people on social media, we bring them in and they join the room with our social media team."

Citizen journalists are also being asked to play a role.

“Getting a story out is usually done through relationships with journalists and this is getting more difficult because there are fewer journalists, fewer specialists," Ms Wirth said.

The evolution of media meant it was now a space where anyone could be a content provider, Ms Wirth said.

“We have 70,000 people travelling with Qantas every day. That means there are 70,000 sets of eyeballs, waiting in airport lounges who can tell stories and information.

“We are looking at new things and even how Qantas can provide its own news content."